Nucleophagy removes cytotoxic trapped PARP1

Poly (ADP-Ribose) Polymerase inhibitors (PARPi) induce cytotoxicity in homologous recombination repair (HRR)-deficient cancers by causing PARP1 to become trapped on chromatin, resulting in irreparable replication-associated DNA damage. Although increased clearance of trapped PARP1 from chromatin reduces the sensitivity of cancer cells to PARPi, details surrounding this process remain unclear. PARPi exposure is known to cause increased autophagy flux, whilst autophagy inhibition can hypersensitise cells to PARPi. Using various biochemical, cell biological and live imaging-based assays, we found that trapped PARP1 is cleared by nucleophagy, the selective autophagy of nuclear substrates. Specifically, the nucleophagy of trapped PARP1 was orchestrated by the selective autophagy receptor TEX264 and its partner segregase p97/VCP. TEX264 mediates this process by directly interacting with trapped PARP1, thus bridging PARP1 to the autophagosomal resident protein LC3 for processing via autophagy. Impeding this process, either chemically or genetically, heightened PARP1 trapping, leading to accumulation of protein aggregates, replication-associated DNA damage and cell lethality, re-sensitising PARPi-resistant cells to various PARPi. In conclusion, we show that nucleophagy acts in a cytoprotective manner to directly target PARPi-induced trapped PARP1 for degradation.

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